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Dustin Hoffman: TMZ and PETA Caused HBO to Cancel 'Luck'

The Oscar winner says in a new interview that his horse racing drama was canceled after one season due to misinformation spread by the animal rights organization and tabloid site.

Dustin Hoffman is still sore about the fact that his horse racing drama Luck was canceled before it reached the finish line.

HBO pulled the plug on the show in March after a first season that was mired in controversy over several horses that died on set. The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals accused the producers of not taking proper care of their horses, and after a third died during the production of the second season, the drama was executive produced by DavidMilch and Michael Mann was canceled.

In an interview with Fox News, ostensibly to promote his directorial debut Quartet, Hoffman recalled the heartbreak of hearing that the show, on which he starred as a horse betting baron, had been ended. He also blamed PETA and the tabloid site TMZ for spreading misconceptions about the treatment of the horses.

"If you Google 'Paulick Report,' it’s a site for horse racing, and in that report is the real reason why the show was canceled," he said. "It was a collaboration between PETA and TMZ. It’s interesting, sites like TMZ, they’re mistaken for news. We did [the 1976 movie] All the President’s Men, and you had to have two sources -- and they don’t need any sources. They’re gossip. But the general public believes what they say.

"It still deeply wounds me," Hoffman continued. "Not for myself, not for the show, but the pain they caused 400 crew people to have. And I don’t think they lost a moment’s sleep. It’s completely distorted. Anyone who raises horses knows they break their legs. The accusations they made were distorted. Every time we’d race the horses, we’d rest them. They’d race 20 seconds, then we’d rest them for an hour."

TMZ responded to Hoffman's statements, defending its reports. "Truth is, the TMZ stories are in sync with what was reported on the Paulick Report," the site wrote Thursday.

The Paulick Report's final statement on Luck did defend the show, accusing PETA of stretching the truth in the service of its mission.

"Despite the finality of what happened, I can’t in good conscience allow the radical animal rights group PETA -- and the journalists who faithfully report whatever the agenda-driven organization tells them -- to have the last word on the circumstances surrounding the deaths of the three horses over the two-year period that Luck was being filmed," the site's owner, Ray Paulick, wrote in March following the cancelation. "It wasn’t until the news cycle was several days old that PETA’s outrageous claims of Luck using unfit, sore, drugged horses was brought into question by anyone. … By then, however, the lies had been repeated often enough that people believed them."

After it canceled Luck, HBO also defended the treatment of the animals.

"Safety is always of paramount concern," the network said in a statement. "We maintained the highest safety standards throughout production, higher in fact than any protocols existing in horse racing anywhere with many fewer incidents than occur in racing or than befall horses normally in barns at night or pastures. While we maintained the highest safety standards possible, accidents unfortunately happen, and it is impossible to guarantee they won’t in the future. Accordingly, we have reached this difficult decision.

"We are immensely proud of this series -- the writing, the acting, the filmmaking, the celebration of the culture of horses and everyone involved in its creation," the statement said.

UPDATED: PETA has issued the following statement in light of Hoffman's remarks: Dustin Hoffman must have a really cold streak running through his heart, as he isn’t hesitant to disrespect whistleblowers and animals to advance his agenda. PETA wrote to him on two separate occasions urging him to use his position to help improve welfare conditions for the horses on the set of Luck after we were contacted by a dozen whistleblowers who were part of his production. Had he taken PETA’s warnings seriously instead of ignoring them, the life of the third horse could have been spared, the show might still be on the air, and his crew might still have their jobs.